Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (
lysozyme
)
21,489
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The bactericidal and bacteriolytic effects of lysolecithin (LL) and egg-white
lysozyme
(
LYZ
) on Staph. aureus and group A streptococci and the solubilization of phospholipids from the bacterial membranes by these agents was studied. Low concentrations of lysolecithin (1--10 microgrames/ml) are highly bactericidal for Steph. aureus and group A streptococci, but induce neither bacteriolysis nor solubilization of a substantial amount of membrane phospholipids. On the other hand, while LL at greater than 50 micrograms/ml causes substantial lipid release, a combination of LL and
LYZ
is absolutely needed to solubilize lipids from streptococci. This combination is, however, not bacteriolytic for this microrganism. The solubilization of lipids from staphylococci by LL is much faster than that induced in streptococci by LL +
LYZ
. The solubilization of the bulk of membrane lipids from staphylococci can also be achieved by
Triton X-100
and by sodium lauryl sulfate and from group A streptococci by
Triton X-100
plus
LYZ
. A variety of other detergents (e.g., Cetavlon, sodium taurocholate, cetyl pyrdinium chloride) have no lipid-releasing properties even in the presence of
LYZ
. The release of lipids by
LYZ
(in the presence of LL) from group A streptococci is related to its enzymatic activity, on a still unknown substrate, but not to its cationic nature as this
muramidase
cannot be replaced by a variety of cation substances (histone, polylysin, leukocyte cationic proteins, polymyxin B, and spermidine). The release of lipids from staphylococci by LL is not inhibited by a variety of anionic and cationic polyelectrocytes (heparin, liquoid, chondroitin sulfate, DNA histone, and polylysine) which markedly inhibit the release of lipids from group A streptococci by LL and
LYZ
. Streptococci that had been cultivated in the presence of subinhibitory concentrations of penicillin G lose their membrane phospholipids to a larger extent and by much smaller concentrations of LL and
LYZ
, as compared to controls, suggesting that the interference with the synthesis of the peptidoglycan increases the accessibility of the cell membrane to the lipid-releasing agents. The mechanism by which LL collaborates with
LYZ
in lipid release is still not known. The possible role of bacterial lipids and lyso compounds in the control of bacterial survival in inflammatory sites is briefly discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of leukocyte hydrolases on bacteria. XIII. Role played by leukocyte extracts, lysolecithin, phospholipase a2, lysozyme, cationic proteins, and detergents in the solubilization of lipids from Staphylococcus aureus and group A streptococci: relation to bactericidal and bacteriolytic reactions in inflammatory sites. 22 78
Using the cloning of part of the T-DNA of pTiC58 from Agrobacterium tumefaciens as an example, techniques are described which enable recombinant plasmids to be mapped and used as hybridization probes. In all cases the starting material is a colony of cells grown on an agar plate which is then subjected to lysis by
lysozyme
and
Triton X-100
in volumes of the order of 300 microliters thus eliminating the need for handling and centrifuging liquid cultures under restrictive containment conditions.
...
PMID:Small-scale techniques for the analysis of recombinant plasmids. 23 38
Thin sections of the cell wall of Sporosarcina ureae revealed two structurally distinct layers: a continuous amorphous zone, approximately 15 nm thick, which was adjacent to the plasma membrane, and an overlying periodic zone, approximately 16 nm thick. Sequential
Triton X-100
and
lysozyme
treatment of isolated walls produced small fragments of the outer regular structure which allowed high-resolution, negatively stained images suitable for optical diffractometric analysis. These data suggested a tetragonal array of complex polygonal units of C-C spacing = 12 nm, with each unit joined to another by two delicate linkers. The array was entirely proteinaceous, consisting of a 150,000-dalton polypeptide which had a high affinity for Mg2+. It proved to be sensitive to chelating agents, 5 mM concentrations of Ca2+, Sr2+, or Ba2+, proteases, heat greater than or equal to 45 degrees C, sodium dodecyl sulfate, and pH greater than or equal to 5.8, but magnesium offered protection against the chelating agents and the deleterious salts.
...
PMID:Surface arrays on the wall of Sporosarcina ureae. 47 3
Hydrolysis of the cell wall of Bacillus subtilis 168 by autolysins or
lysozyme
resulted in the exposure of glucosylated teichoic acid molecules as evidenced by increased precipitation of [14C] concanavalin A. The number of concanavalin A-reactive sites increased significantly after only limited enzymatic digestion of the walls. Quantitative analyses of [14C] concanavalin A-treated wall or wall hydrolysate complexes indicate that approximately one-half of the teichoic acid molecules are surface-exposed, whereas the remainder are probably embedded within the peptidoglycan matrix. Treatment of the cell walls with sodium dodecyl sulfate or
Triton X-100
did not result in new concanavalin A-reactive sites. Partial autolysis diminished the ability of the cell walls to adsorb bacteriophage phi25. Fluorescein-labeled concanavalin A bound intensely over the entire surface of growing B. subtilis 168 cells, suggesting that teichoic acid molecules are located on the total solvent-exposed surface area of the bacteria.
...
PMID:Distribution of teichoic acid in the cell wall of Bacillus subtilis. 80 66
Triton X
-treated prosthecae from Asticcacaulis excentricus and A. biprosthecum were sonicated and examined with a electron microscope. Crossbands had a substructure of concentric rings and were digested by
lysozyme
.
...
PMID:Ultrastructure of crossbands in prosthecae of Asticcacaulis species. 119 45
A simple technique is proposed for the detection of restriction endonucleases in Streptomyces and Nocardia cells. The analysis was performed directly in the cells collected from colonies cultivated on Petri dishes with an inoculation loop. The cells were treated with
lysozyme
, EDTA and
Triton X-100
. The lysates were tested for restriction endonucleases. The technique enables the detection of enzymes Nco I, Not I, Nru I, Sfr 3031, and Sfi I in the lysates of the respective strains-producers.
...
PMID:[Determination of restriction endonucleases in Streptomyces and Nocardia colonies]. 131 69
A simple RNA isolation method was developed to purify bacterial RNAs from a large number of samples simultaneously in an hour. The method is based on boiling the cells in the presence of
Triton X-100
and
lysozyme
, and then preferential RNA precipitation with ammonium acetate. There is no CsCl centrifugation required. For the nitrogen-fixing bacterium Klebsiella pneumoniae, the depression condition can be maintained during the cell-harvesting process. The intact isolated RNAs appeared to be free of protein, with a yield of 100 micrograms RNA from a 4-ml cell culture of 100 Klett units (10(9) cells/ml). Any DNA present was in a form that did not react with a nifH probe following Northern blotting to nitrocellulose (i.e., was not single-stranded).
...
PMID:Two-step isolation of bacterial ribonucleic acid without using a chaotropic agent or cesium chloride centrifugation. 169 54
The chemical composition and presence of immunogenic components in the lysates of the cell walls of group A Streptococcus, type M29, were studied. The lysates were prepared with the use of
muramidase
. Fc-Receptors were detected in the lysates. Within the first 30 minutes of cell wall lysis by
muramidase
, 4 times higher amounts of the protein reacting with fibrinogen excreted than in the subsequent 4 hours. The lysates contained immunogenic proteins. Fraction III isolated by chromatography of the 30-minute lysate on DEAE-trisacryl formed a single precipitation band with lysate antiserum. The lysate Fraction IV forming three precipitation bands contained a protein not specific of the type. The protein was identical to the protein antigen from
Triton X-100
extracts of group A Streptococcus, types M1, M12 and M29. The group-specific polysaccharide was detected in the lysate Fraction I and Fraction II of the 4-hour lysate.
...
PMID:[Immunological study of lysates from the cell wall of group A Streptococcus]. 175 6
When assayed in vitro, the activity of the photosynthetic enzyme ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase is both enhanced and protected from spontaneous decay by exogenous proteins such as hemoglobin, serum albumin, and aldolase. Other proteins and amino acids tested are either ineffective (
lysozyme
, ferritin, lysine, and cysteine) or afford only partial protection (catalase, glycine, and phenylalanine). Protective proteins do not bind to, or exchange disulfides with, ribulose 1.5 bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. Since their effect can be mimicked by reductively treated detergents such as
Triton X-100
, it appears that proteins protect from decay by quenching the spontaneous oxidative degradation and inhibiting surface adsorption which could lead to enzyme unfolding. Release of adsorbed molecules from the container surface is likely to be the cause of carboxylase activity enhancement.
...
PMID:Protection and enhancement of ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase activity by exogenous proteins. 191 Apr 60
Bovine spermatozoa that have been exposed to seminal plasma possess more binding sites for heparin than sperm from the cauda epididymis that have not been exposed to accessory sex gland secretions. Seminal plasma exposure enables sperm, following incubation with heparin, to undergo zonae pellucidae-induced exocytosis of the acrosome. In this study, the regulatory role of seminal plasma heparin-binding proteins in capacitation of bovine spermatozoa by heparin was investigated. Plasma membranes from sperm exposed to seminal plasma in vivo or in vitro contained a series of acidic 15-17 kDa proteins not found in cauda epididymal sperm. Western blots of membrane proteins indicated that these 15-17 kDa proteins bound [125I]-heparin. Heparin-binding proteins were isolated by heparin affinity chromatography from seminal plasma from vasectomized bulls. Gel electrophoresis indicated that the heparin-binding peaks contained 14-18 kDa proteins with isoelectric variation, a basic 24 kDa protein, and a 31 kDa protein. Western blots probed with [125I]-heparin confirmed the ability of each of these proteins to bind heparin. Each of these proteins, as well as control proteins, bound to epididymal sperm. The seminal plasma proteins were peripherally associated with sperm since they were removed by hypertonic medium and did not segregate into the detergent phase of
Triton X
-114. Seminal plasma heparin-binding proteins potentiated zonae pellucidae-induced acrosome reactions in epididymal sperm. However, seminal plasma proteins that did not bind to the heparin affinity column were unable to stimulate zonae-sensitivity. Control proteins, including
lysozyme
--which binds to both heparin and sperm, were ineffective at enhancing zonae-induced acrosome reactions. These data provide evidence for a positive regulatory role of seminal plasma heparin-binding proteins in capacitation of bovine spermatozoa.
...
PMID:Heparin-binding proteins from seminal plasma bind to bovine spermatozoa and modulate capacitation by heparin. 238 14
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